You're my hero, Mr. Trekplanner! (Is it Jeff?) With all the stress in the country during an intense election season, you provide a genuine escape by reminding us that cultures come and go and that the Wilderness is vast, beautiful and larger than us all. Drone videos, RUclips, Google earth and a brave individual with passion like you have all come together in a new era of archeological discovery. Safe travels, Sir!
When I think of all who are homebound or hospitalized or invalid ,,,,that you give an opportunity to transport visually and mentally out their environment,,, I rejoice and I'm so grateful for what you do and your efforts to share. Do you have a beautiful spirit. thank you.
I'm one of those, previous happy hiker including the gorgeous SW, but life can have different plans for you. Such channels & videos full my spirit, especially from such respectful & knowledgeable creators! 🙏🕊️
If you look at the topography from above I think there may be a rain catchment with a porous layer leading to the cave, the structure to the right may have been a cistern, water source may still support the plants below the ruin.
Jeff, not only do you have a natural instinct for presenting these really interesting things in a sweet and compelling way, but you have, apparently, an endless supply of hats.
I was going to say that I saw moki steps @ 8:14 on the right side of your shot but of course you saw them too. Always love watching your videos and thank you for sharing as I would never have seen this in my life if it was not for you. Thank you again.
They kept them on Cradle Boards, for at Least a Year or Two, and Children are not Dumb.....they listened to their Parents, and You Should Research El Morro, "Enscription Rock", in Western New Mexico not too far from Quemado, N.M. So Beautiful Here.
your explorations take us back to our history , thanks for the images and wonders of living 1000 years ago, Imagine living there and hiking down to your house, isolated, but safe, wonderful !!!
Thx for the update. You are in our thoughts n hoping for resolution. Really appreciate you n your channel but your well being is of the most importance. Hang in there!
What a superb landscape....I used to rock climb...but there's no way I'd even attempt those steps without a very secure top rope.... excellent as ever mate.
What an impressive cave! The ancients must have been life-threatened. We can travel back in time, but only a little bit, not enough to see everything. Mindboggling!
Loving the content Jeff, my wife and I enjoy watching the show. I spent a lot of time in the Army and have also done a lot of hiking, rock climbing, trekking and backpacking camping. I also was a vertical rescue trainer for fire department where I used to live. I would be very interested and think many would benefit if you did a show or two on what you pack for short trips all the way to ones that might demand self sufficiency for a couple of days. I’ve been more impressed with your sense of adventure that is tempers with reasonable risk and safety. People need to know that you can be safe and still have a ton of fun!
Thank you, Jeff for sharing this amazing find. I can't imagine just how difficult it would have been for the Native people climbing up and down those steps with all needed provisions to live in this high cave dwelling place. I think you are right in observing that they probably came down from the top and not from the bottom of the canyon up. What an interesting place, for sure.
How well those ruins are made. So precise in their angles. It always amazes me what they did without any modern tools. Thanks for taking us on your trek! ❤
What an amazing place! Thank you for taking us there! I’m just overwhelmed! I can’t imagine trying to raise children and keep them safe in such a dangerous place. So much admiration for these people.
Had it made??? That’s not what I’m thinking! Imagine being a pregnant woman climbing in and out of there. Imagine being a mama with babies, toddlers and youngsters up there, trying to feed them. Trying to have enough firewood and water and food that you have to forage for and carry back. Trying to keep the kids safe on these sheer cliffs. Imagine being an old man or woman, injured, sick or disabled, having to make your way in and out of this place. Imagine hunters with their hands full of weapons and their packs full of fresh killed game climbing down. Imagine gathering more and more rocks and mud for construction and having to carry it all in. You need your hands free to navigate into this place so whatever you carry is in a back pack, making you off balance. Imagine you are trying to hide from enemies the whole time. I think it must have been a very hard life.
here's my comment to help keep the algorithm feed🍩 one of the many things it feeds off of is community interaction why not feed it and help the channel grow
Good job ! That was indeed AMAZING ! Thank you for your hard work and sharing your adventures with us , the not so fit , your one of life's little pleasures ❤
Many years ago on a trip to Lake Powell, Utah. We came across the Moki steps, my youngest daughter climbed them, but got scared coming down, so my husband , her dad, had to climb up and get her. Scary!! No way I could climb those steps, I am scared of heights!
There are a minimum of 14 sets of Moki steps from the San Juan River along Comb Ridge up to state Hwy 95. They are almost impossible to be seen if you are not there at the right time of day!
Inter-tribal warfare is the only explanation that seems plausible to go to such extremes. Life was extremely difficult back then. The Navajo remember this in their oral histories.
The Biblical narrative in Genesis says that there were Giants on the earth in those days and also afterwards. There are archeological evidence all over the globe, megaliths and giant skeletons, and Native American stories that corroborate as such. Also legends that indicate the native people groups were being cannibalized by these giants, Nephilim. The indigenous built high, defensive, hidden structures to help with their survival of that incursion.
I read an article in the Smithsonian magazine from 2005 I think of archaeologists and climbers had to go to this one place where there were still bones and artifacts left and there was evidence of the murder of the people there there were pots there and they were able to find a certain kind of human protein in the pots meant that humans had been boiled and eaten they found feces next to the child's body that's face had been bashed in they said this was the ultimate like desecration or whatever so pretty horrible so what they were saying was they killed ate the child and then they defecated right next to the bones it was really awful it was all proven by scientific fact by checking protein in the feces and the utensils used to boil the meat anyway so I'll have to read that article again. Apparently that's why they were hiding there was some ruthless stuff going on and the stories of cannibalism were true. Just who was doing it is what I don't know I don't think they have truly figured it out. The play they found this stuff in was very remote and I think they said it was all the way down in Texas.
I read somewhere that the giants ate them back in the day when giants terrorized & ate People. The people would have to hide from the giants. Maybe that's why they made their homes in such hard to get at places. I don't know but it is definitely a fascinating subject ❤ ?@@kayhansen9229
@@kayhansen9229I believe you are referring to a site in Cowboy Wash, Utah. This site is believed to be the ruins of ancestral puebloans. Karl Reinhard, an archeologist who specializes in human coprolite remains (feces), discusses this in length in his article "A Coprological View of Ancesteral Pueblo Cannibalism." He has studied thousands of samples from around the geographical area, and this was the only evidence he had ever seen of human remains in a corprolite, even when it was clear that ancestral puebloans faced extreme drought and periods of starvation. He posits that the remains most likely came from an outsider who killed and cannibalized the inhabitants of Cowboy Wash. It's worth noting that around the same time, the Chaco Canyon society collapsed, and there is great evidence of cannibalism there. He argues that these practices came from central America, not the puebloans, and this is a strong argument when you look at how similar Chaco Canyon culture and building practices are in relation to central American societies. In short, the cannibal of Cowboy Wash could have been someone influenced by Chacoan culture. They most likely were not Ancesteral Puebloans eating each other.
Thank you again for another amazing trek. I am continually amazed by talents, artistry, intuitiveness, and intelligence of the ancient indigenous peoples of our country. Their descendants have not been dealt with honorably by our own European conqueror ancestors. Forgive us, good Lord.
What a beautiful place. According to the difficulties we assume we see, it must have been quite a secluded and difficult lifestyle. But that was what they knew their lives to be.
Hvn’t watched the whole trek yet, but wondering if you see hand and toe holds in the side of the cliff. That’s, of course, how so many sights in cliffs were accessed by the inhabitants. Lately I’ve been missing the 4 corners area and the states that comprise it… I’m stuck in the TX metroplex & miss the canyon lands more than ever. The unsettled feeling in our country that has prevailed for some time, leaves me yearning to be grounded & truly reconnected to SoWestern nature. I’m missing it SO much. Your treks are quite a boost to my inner self. I can feel I’m with you experiencing once again the unique nature & spirit only these areas hold for me… May you always be safe and joyful on your treks! I’m SO appreciative for your spirit for exploration & your time spent sharing with us. Be well, Terry in TX🍁🍂
Awesome video, insightful observations, and amazing drone footage! 👌 Thanks for staying true to the real and down to Earth Trek Planner 😊 Some exploration channels had gone to such low ethics as to use clickbait fake AI generated thumbnails, misrepresent all the locations they visit, and then censor and delete comments if you mention it. Those channels are starting to feel like weird Orwellian un-reality. Mind control games, deception and censorship. Your content gives me hope, it is a breath of fresh air. ✨️
Im sitting here in the uk watching along & it just makes me happy & pleased to know that this place & all the other amazing places around the world are all there this very second. I like to go there in my minds eye. Im stuck indoors & this type of content is quite precious ❤
This is one of your best videos. I love the drone perspectives. Indeed, this was a scary place to live, hide, or whatever. I can't even begin to imagine. I appreciate your dedication.
Wow... what amazes me is imagining the labor it took to MOVE the building materials to this site. Baskets of mud mortar, and all the stones. Thank you!
Thank you so much for doing all that work and going all those distances to show us these wonderful ancient ruins may God bless your path and keep you safe.
You walked through some Brilliant Landscape to show us these Fantastic Ruins - on of the Best Preserved once - Amazing - thanks for another Great Adventure ! Many Cheers from Australia !
Thanks for taking us along. I love the mystery of this time and ponder their lives. It's hard for me to picture families living here. Yet I know in someway they must. Following you.
I'm trying to picture a young woman with a baby on her back, or a man with a toddler, trying to maneuver their way up or down those shallow steps. It's mind-boggling! I think it must have been sheer desperation to create shelter and live in such a dangerous spot. I also wonder if it was a shelter created by a larger tribe, whose men and boys went there to stay for short-term ceremonies. Certainly, as you pointed out, there isn't a good food cultivation site in that canyon and all comestables would have to be carried in. It.'s a mystery and I thank you for sharing it.
Thanks! My spouse and I want to say Thank You for your treks! I am a drone pilot, too. I have a lot of admiration for your flying skills. You make flying in those difficult situations seem easy! I know….it’s not so easy. Nice job!
I actually got goose bumps from this one.. Soooo cool my friend! I can't wait until we find an untouched treasure again with you like that time you found sealed doorways. I always wondered if you reported that other find to the right people.. Keep On Keepin On...
What a fantastic find,you really are in tune with every place that you visit,maybe the ancestors are guiding you, whatever it is please keep taking us with you,you have opened up a whole new world for me and I am forever grateful.Andrea.U K.❤
Jeff you have taught me(us) watching your videos, to look. I've started looking for the steps. With those steps so embedded, they went up and down so many times bringing supplies. Keep the videos coming! 😊❤
What a privilege to see these places in your videos. You ask, who were they hiding from? Maybe these dwellings are much older than we think? Maybe there were different, much larger animals and predatory birds that posed threats? @11:16 I can see where the rain could have run off into the lower pond to drink and construct with. They were hidden from predators and sheltered from fire, rain , snow, wind.....seems a perfect place to live.
This is both scary and incredible at the same time! To live in such an extreme location, far away from both food and water; it makes me wonder who or WHAT they were hiding from!
I have such respect and admiration for all the First Nation tribes that survived out here. I wouldn't last a day! My fair skin would burn to a crisp. I have to wear sunglasses if the sun is out. The places where they build their food storage and shelters is crazy!!! They are fearless,
Imagine picking up the biggest stones you can physically carry and taking them to those caves that you can't even imagine climbing to with nothing but a water bottle 😮
@8:29 IMHO, the "debris" shown at the base would be the rock that was broken by the people, to be used to build the rooms. Notice how much rock these walls are made of, and it would have been insane to bring them up from the bottom, or even from the top of the canyon. So, it is the original quarry, man made, not by erosion.
@alexjohnson1612 Look at the cave. Then look at those blocks. The blocks didn't come from that cave. They weren't excavating those caves. They were there long before those blocks got there. Someone carried them there. How big were these people?
@arkangeln910c8 That cave looks just like all the caves around it. Those weren't excavated. They found that cave the same way you or I would find one today and then went to work bringing in building material
Thank you for finding this gorgeous place and sharing it with us.
You're my hero, Mr. Trekplanner! (Is it Jeff?) With all the stress in the country during an intense election season, you provide a genuine escape by reminding us that cultures come and go and that the Wilderness is vast, beautiful and larger than us all. Drone videos, RUclips, Google earth and a brave individual with passion like you have all come together in a new era of archeological discovery. Safe travels, Sir!
It is Jeff! Thank you for your very kind comment, John! 🙂I would love to keep doing this for as long as I can!
@TheTrekPlanner hey you have some cool videos. I would love to see you make a stone house one day, that would be cool. just an idea
@@TheTrekPlanneris This New Mexico, landscape looks familar......there Are So Many Beautiful Sites here, and Secrets......
❤️🔥Vaya con Dios❤️🔥
Stress may have driven them to such a remote environment, ironically we are compelled to flee from stress...by observing their ancient handy work.
When I think of all who are homebound or hospitalized or invalid ,,,,that you give an opportunity to transport visually and mentally out their environment,,,
I rejoice and I'm so grateful for what you do and your efforts to share. Do you have a beautiful spirit.
thank you.
I'm one of those, previous happy hiker including the gorgeous SW, but life can have different plans for you. Such channels & videos full my spirit, especially from such respectful & knowledgeable creators! 🙏🕊️
That was fascinating. Those people were super strong and agile. Very cool. Thanks for sharing!
So many people now can't even walk into a store without having to use the electric chair cart
Look into tartaria, these were advanced people and melted buildings also effected by the great deluge
Fantastic adventure, Jeff! Thanks for letting me accompany you on this vicarious trip. I cannot do it anymore (I'm almost 84) so I must depend on you.
If you look at the topography from above I think there may be a rain catchment with a porous layer leading to the cave, the structure to the right may have been a cistern, water source may still support the plants below the ruin.
Jeff, not only do you have a natural instinct for presenting these really interesting things in a sweet and compelling way, but you have, apparently, an endless supply of hats.
Whoa what a find! Ty as always, I so enjoy all your trips & traveling. Stay curious.
Another awesome adventure. Thank you for sharing it.😊
What a crazy place to build anything! Thanks for sharing it with us!❤
I was going to say that I saw moki steps @ 8:14 on the right side of your shot but of course you saw them too. Always love watching your videos and thank you for sharing as I would never have seen this in my life if it was not for you. Thank you again.
The thing I always wonder is how they raised their children in these places.
They'd have to watch them 24/7 to keep them from falling off the cliff.
It only takes one child falling to scare the rest of them.
@@Millzspec ..and I'll bet more than a few took the dive...
I bet they put them on a leash!
@@floydiandreamscapes5145 Most kids are afraid of stairs. And they weren't chasing soccer balls around. I'm sure they learned real fast
They kept them on Cradle Boards, for at Least a Year or Two, and Children are not Dumb.....they listened to their Parents, and You Should Research El Morro, "Enscription Rock", in Western New Mexico not too far from Quemado, N.M.
So Beautiful Here.
your explorations take us back to our history , thanks for the images and wonders of living 1000 years ago, Imagine living there and hiking down to your house, isolated, but safe, wonderful !!!
Thanks
Love your explores. The history and artifacts are unreal. It’s truly extraordinary. UK oldie here
Thank you for your very kind support of me and my channel!! I would love to make it to the UK one day and see the amazing history there too!
-Jeff
Another great adventure! Thanks for taking us along again. 😎
I love it when you stop & pause to look at the beauty around you!
Jeff, I love your adventures in the desert southwest! It’s such an educational experience! Keep em coming!
That was amazing! Thank you Jeff for sharing it with us!
Thx for the update. You are in our thoughts n hoping for resolution. Really appreciate you n your channel but your well being is of the most importance. Hang in there!
Thank you for another exceptional journey. 😊😊
What a superb landscape....I used to rock climb...but there's no way I'd even attempt those steps without a very secure top rope.... excellent as ever mate.
What an impressive cave! The ancients must have been life-threatened. We can travel back in time, but only a little bit, not enough to see everything. Mindboggling!
That little hide a way spot/home , treacherous but also very comforting
FABULOUS !!! 😘 Has to be one of the coolest 🤩 EVER. What a place 🙏❤ Their physical strength must have been super human !
Wonderful, just wonderful!
Loving the content Jeff, my wife and I enjoy watching the show. I spent a lot of time in the Army and have also done a lot of hiking, rock climbing, trekking and backpacking camping. I also was a vertical rescue trainer for fire department where I used to live. I would be very interested and think many would benefit if you did a show or two on what you pack for short trips all the way to ones that might demand self sufficiency for a couple of days. I’ve been more impressed with your sense of adventure that is tempers with reasonable risk and safety. People need to know that you can be safe and still have a ton of fun!
Thank you, Jeff for sharing this amazing find. I can't imagine just how difficult it would have been for the Native people climbing up and down those steps with all needed provisions to live in this high cave dwelling place. I think you are right in observing that they probably came down from the top and not from the bottom of the canyon up. What an interesting place, for sure.
Thanks Jeff for going where I can’t go.
How well those ruins are made. So precise in their angles. It always amazes me what they did without any modern tools. Thanks for taking us on your trek! ❤
Oh but they Did have modern tools. Think about it! Our history is Nothing like they tell us!!
Nice puzzle. Keep it up, stay safe, positive waves.
What an amazing place! Thank you for taking us there! I’m just overwhelmed! I can’t imagine trying to raise children and keep them safe in such a dangerous place. So much admiration for these people.
Another excellent adventure. Beautiful country. Thanks Jeff.
Ancestral Pueblo really had it made: hanging with your friends, looking at great views and building forts and houses in cool places.
Had it made??? That’s not what I’m thinking! Imagine being a pregnant woman climbing in and out of there. Imagine being a mama with babies, toddlers and youngsters up there, trying to feed them. Trying to have enough firewood and water and food that you have to forage for and carry back. Trying to keep the kids safe on these sheer cliffs. Imagine being an old man or woman, injured, sick or disabled, having to make your way in and out of this place. Imagine hunters with their hands full of weapons and their packs full of fresh killed game climbing down. Imagine gathering more and more rocks and mud for construction and having to carry it all in. You need your hands free to navigate into this place so whatever you carry is in a back pack, making you off balance. Imagine you are trying to hide from enemies the whole time. I think it must have been a very hard life.
@ yeah but no light pollution and more and songbirds and no office work so overall cool
Beautiful, exciting, and inspiring. Thank you so much Jeff.
Another wonderful video! Thank You for taking us all along!
I love the precision of their corners. So straight and perfect.
Breath-taking! Thank you for allowing me to armchair share your adventure, from Scotland!
Oh wow! At 9:52 you can clearly see the words Eagle Nest and what almost looks like a nest! Wow!! So kool! 🥰 love your videos! 🙏🥰
Amazing you saw that! Even after you told us I had to look twice! and maybe the date 1955?
@@tracker4823The date was 1892.
here's my comment to help keep the algorithm feed🍩
one of the many things it feeds off of is community interaction
why not feed it and help the channel grow
I really appreciate that! Thank you! 🙂
@@TheTrekPlanner yw! just a small ty for all you put into getting these amazing video trips out for us
Good job ! That was indeed AMAZING ! Thank you for your hard work and sharing your adventures with us , the not so fit , your one of life's little pleasures ❤
Many years ago on a trip to Lake Powell, Utah. We came across the Moki steps, my youngest daughter climbed them, but got scared coming down, so my husband , her dad, had to climb up and get her. Scary!! No way I could climb those steps, I am scared of heights!
There are a minimum of 14 sets of Moki steps from the San Juan River along Comb Ridge up to state Hwy 95. They are almost impossible to be seen if you are not there at the right time of day!
Thanks Jeff...another great adventure..I never tire of watching ..All the best..Till next time...
Inter-tribal warfare is the only explanation that seems plausible to go to such extremes. Life was extremely difficult back then. The Navajo remember this in their oral histories.
The Biblical narrative in Genesis says that there were Giants on the earth in those days and also afterwards. There are archeological evidence all over the globe, megaliths and giant skeletons, and Native American stories that corroborate as such. Also legends that indicate the native people groups were being cannibalized by these giants, Nephilim. The indigenous built high, defensive, hidden structures to help with their survival of that incursion.
Slavery
I read an article in the Smithsonian magazine from 2005 I think of archaeologists and climbers had to go to this one place where there were still bones and artifacts left and there was evidence of the murder of the people there there were pots there and they were able to find a certain kind of human protein in the pots meant that humans had been boiled and eaten they found feces next to the child's body that's face had been bashed in they said this was the ultimate like desecration or whatever so pretty horrible so what they were saying was they killed ate the child and then they defecated right next to the bones it was really awful it was all proven by scientific fact by checking protein in the feces and the utensils used to boil the meat anyway so I'll have to read that article again. Apparently that's why they were hiding there was some ruthless stuff going on and the stories of cannibalism were true. Just who was doing it is what I don't know I don't think they have truly figured it out. The play they found this stuff in was very remote and I think they said it was all the way down in Texas.
I read somewhere that the giants ate them back in the day when giants terrorized & ate People. The people would have to hide from the giants. Maybe that's why they made their homes in such hard to get at places. I don't know but it is definitely a fascinating subject ❤ ?@@kayhansen9229
@@kayhansen9229I believe you are referring to a site in Cowboy Wash, Utah. This site is believed to be the ruins of ancestral puebloans.
Karl Reinhard, an archeologist who specializes in human coprolite remains (feces), discusses this in length in his article "A Coprological View of Ancesteral Pueblo Cannibalism." He has studied thousands of samples from around the geographical area, and this was the only evidence he had ever seen of human remains in a corprolite, even when it was clear that ancestral puebloans faced extreme drought and periods of starvation. He posits that the remains most likely came from an outsider who killed and cannibalized the inhabitants of Cowboy Wash.
It's worth noting that around the same time, the Chaco Canyon society collapsed, and there is great evidence of cannibalism there. He argues that these practices came from central America, not the puebloans, and this is a strong argument when you look at how similar Chaco Canyon culture and building practices are in relation to central American societies.
In short, the cannibal of Cowboy Wash could have been someone influenced by Chacoan culture. They most likely were not Ancesteral Puebloans eating each other.
Magical mystery tour; WOW😮
Remarkable ruin. Your treks always leave me thinking about the lives of these people. Awesome as always Jeff.
That was a wonderful video. I really enjoyed the step by step narrative as your discovery unfolded.
Thank you again for another amazing trek. I am continually amazed by talents, artistry, intuitiveness, and intelligence of the ancient indigenous peoples of our country. Their descendants have not been dealt with honorably by our own European conqueror ancestors. Forgive us, good Lord.
Loved this adventure. Looking forward to the next one ❤
Thank you Jeff! That was absolutely amazing!
What a beautiful place. According to the difficulties we assume we see, it must have been quite a secluded and difficult lifestyle. But that was what they knew their lives to be.
This was awesome! Thank you!❤
Hvn’t watched the whole trek yet, but wondering if you see hand and toe holds in the side of the cliff. That’s, of course, how so many sights in cliffs were accessed by the inhabitants. Lately I’ve been missing the 4 corners area and the states that comprise it… I’m stuck in the TX metroplex & miss the canyon lands more than ever. The unsettled feeling in our country that has prevailed for some time, leaves me yearning to be grounded & truly reconnected to SoWestern nature. I’m missing it SO much. Your treks are quite a boost to my inner self.
I can feel I’m with you experiencing once again the unique nature & spirit only these areas hold for me… May you always be safe and joyful on your treks! I’m SO appreciative for your spirit for exploration & your time spent sharing with us. Be well, Terry in TX🍁🍂
Thanks for showing us these marvelous things and expanding our understanding of indigenous history.
Awesome video, insightful observations, and amazing drone footage! 👌 Thanks for staying true to the real and down to Earth Trek Planner 😊
Some exploration channels had gone to such low ethics as to use clickbait fake AI generated thumbnails, misrepresent all the locations they visit, and then censor and delete comments if you mention it. Those channels are starting to feel like weird Orwellian un-reality. Mind control games, deception and censorship.
Your content gives me hope, it is a breath of fresh air. ✨️
Absolutely amazing and beautiful. Very very special. Thank you so much for sharing this gorgeous place with us
Im sitting here in the uk watching along & it just makes me happy & pleased to know that this place & all the other amazing places around the world are all there this very second. I like to go there in my minds eye. Im stuck indoors & this type of content is quite precious ❤
This is one of your best videos. I love the drone perspectives. Indeed, this was a scary place to live, hide, or whatever. I can't even begin to imagine. I appreciate your dedication.
Holy Crap!!
Seeing that drop gives me the Willies!!!
One slip and it's sayanora for the Indian!!!
😄😆😅🤣😂
That's humorous the way U said that!😅😂. It's not funny if they fell but it's funny how u said it dude!😅😂
That must have got your heart beating, finding that 😮❤
Wow... what amazes me is imagining the labor it took to MOVE the building materials to this site. Baskets of mud mortar, and all the stones. Thank you!
So cool. Thank you for sharing these wonderful finds.
Thank you so much for doing all that work and going all those distances to show us these wonderful ancient ruins may God bless your path and keep you safe.
You walked through some Brilliant Landscape to show us these Fantastic Ruins - on of the Best Preserved once - Amazing - thanks for another Great Adventure ! Many Cheers from Australia !
Thanks! Good luck.
Nice profetional job Jeff.stay safe 👍👍✌️
Thanks for taking us along. I love the mystery of this time and ponder their lives. It's hard for me to picture families living here. Yet I know in someway they must. Following you.
I'm trying to picture a young woman with a baby on her back, or a man with a toddler, trying to maneuver their way up or down those shallow steps. It's mind-boggling! I think it must have been sheer desperation to create shelter and live in such a dangerous spot. I also wonder if it was a shelter created by a larger tribe, whose men and boys went there to stay for short-term ceremonies. Certainly, as you pointed out, there isn't a good food cultivation site in that canyon and all comestables would have to be carried in. It.'s a mystery and I thank you for sharing it.
They were not that shallow when they lived there although it was always dangerous!
Fabulous Building all the way to the top of the cave and a dog door too. Primitives were pretty smart.
At 9:45 you can read on the wall, EAGLE NEST plus other writing I cannot make out??
Yes! I see it too. How tf did someone get up or down there. Yeehaw
@davidrassler3589 He said it was a well known documented spot
@@lineclearancepatriot4465 not hard at all, ever heard of ropeladders?
The rest of it says “I.A.E.E. 1892”
Enjoyed it very much. Hope you and your are well. Thank you for the wonderful trip.😊
Once again I am blown away . Thanks for all your hard work.
Always enjoy these videos 💯
Thanks! My spouse and I want to say Thank You for your treks! I am a drone pilot, too. I have a lot of admiration for your flying skills. You make flying in those difficult situations seem easy! I know….it’s not so easy. Nice job!
Escaping the enemy and just trying to thrive and live. Thank you so much.
That was well Hidden. Love seeing it.
Absolutely amazing ❤
Thx for showing this stunning place❤👋🇫🇮
I actually got goose bumps from this one.. Soooo cool my friend! I can't wait until we find an untouched treasure again with you like that time you found sealed doorways. I always wondered if you reported that other find to the right people.. Keep On Keepin On...
What a fantastic find,you really are in tune with every place that you visit,maybe the ancestors are guiding you, whatever it is please keep taking us with you,you have opened up a whole new world for me and I am forever grateful.Andrea.U K.❤
Wow that was a cool finding !!!! Thanx for sharing ❤
Jeff you have taught me(us) watching your videos, to look. I've started looking for the steps. With those steps so embedded, they went up and down so many times bringing supplies. Keep the videos coming! 😊❤
Awesome video's as always. Stay safe, thank you for sharing.
Wow! That is an amazing place. Thanks for giving us a chance to experience this history.
Love all your adventures into nature's beauty. The history I have learned from your channel. Love everything you do ! ❤❤❤Thank you
What a privilege to see these places in your videos. You ask, who were they hiding from? Maybe these dwellings are much older than we think? Maybe there were different, much larger animals and predatory birds that posed threats? @11:16 I can see where the rain could have run off into the lower pond to drink and construct with. They were hidden from predators and sheltered from fire, rain , snow, wind.....seems a perfect place to live.
This is both scary and incredible at the same time! To live in such an extreme location, far away from both food and water; it makes me wonder who or WHAT they were hiding from!
Thanks! I appreciate the time and effort you put into this high quality content.
That is a very unique area. Think preserve and protect.
Wow!! That was amazing!! Thank you so much for your videos!❤
So many questions, so little answers. What a great show!
Very Cool!!! TY for sharing!!! TY and God Bless!!!
Thanks Jeff! Always love seeing these amazing places and imagining what purpise that parts of them served.
Thank you this is very Cool Jeff was fun to see!🤗
Right on. As always thanks brother!
Thank u for taking me to places that I know I'll never make it to, but I'd want to explore!
I am speechless... you are amazing❤
Thanks!
Incredible, thanks once again. Stay safe.
I have such respect and admiration for all the First Nation tribes that survived out here. I wouldn't last a day! My fair skin would burn to a crisp. I have to wear sunglasses if the sun is out. The places where they build their food storage and shelters is crazy!!! They are fearless,
Well, Jeff-this was a gopd one. Thanks a bunch for taking us to this great ruin.
Imagine picking up the biggest stones you can physically carry and taking them to those caves that you can't even imagine climbing to with nothing but a water bottle 😮
They would of used the stone from the cave
@8:29 IMHO, the "debris" shown at the base would be the rock that was broken by the people, to be used to build the rooms. Notice how much rock these walls are made of, and it would have been insane to bring them up from the bottom, or even from the top of the canyon. So, it is the original quarry, man made, not by erosion.
@alexjohnson1612 Look at the cave. Then look at those blocks. The blocks didn't come from that cave. They weren't excavating those caves. They were there long before those blocks got there. Someone carried them there. How big were these people?
@arkangeln910c8 That cave looks just like all the caves around it. Those weren't excavated. They found that cave the same way you or I would find one today and then went to work bringing in building material
@TurnipGreen Why would you get rock from elsewhere when there's rock there, it doesn't make sense.